Moore: Fetishes and LSD - Raimondo’s Controversial Appointments

Russell J. Moore, GoLocalProv MINDSETTER™

Moore: Fetishes and LSD - Raimondo’s Controversial Appointments

When Governor Gina Raimondo campaigned for the job in 2014, perhaps her strongest asset was the fact that she appeared to be a competent, strong leader, with the managerial skills to right the good ship that is Rhode Island.

And to her credit, Raimondo is well-spoken, always on point and boasts a successful career in the financial sector prior. She projects competence. 

But recent appointments to state boards and commissions raise questions as to whether the people she has hired to vet her appointments are up to the task. Like the great Harry Truman said, "the buck stops here". That means blunders like these reflect on her management capabilities. Good managers don't delegate tasks to people who cannot handle them. 

In October, GoLocal revealed that Raimondo appointed Vanessa Toledo-Vickers to the state's powerful Commerce Corporation. Toledo-Vickers owned Manchester 65, a controversial West Warwick nightclub known for kink and S&M events. (The nightclub has since gone out of business). Her ownership stake in the business was not disclosed on the Commerce Corporation's website.

In The Past

Last week, GoLocal revealed that Raimondo appointed a convicted drug dealer to the state parenting board for education in January. William Cotton, who is currently a registered agent for B&B Consulting, a medical marijuana consulting center in Warwick, has two felony arrests on his record. 

The first arrest took place in 1989 for manufacture and sale of LSD (acid). The second arrest happened in 1990. It was for felony possession of a schedule 1 controlled substance. Cotton pled no contest to each charge and served time in prison. (Cotton chalks the situation up to be a fan of The Grateful Dead as a youngster.)

The Rhode Island Family Engagement Advisory Council, the board's title, serves as an advisory board and an intermediary between parents and the Governor, the department of education, the board of regents, and school districts. The 21 member board contains 11 parents, one of which is Cotton.

Rehabilitation

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I'm a firm believer in rehabilitation and am happy for Cotton. It really does seem like he was able to turn his life around after his skirmishes with the law in the late eighties and early nineties and that's fabulous. Yet call me crazy, but in a state of about 1 million people, I tend to think that the Governor could've found someone whose background doesn't contain a drug dealing conviction. 

Cotton argued that he somehow sets a righteous example for other men by serving on the advisory board. 

"Look, one of the few reasons I'm doing what I'm doing with education, is there aren't enough parents in my situation, especially fathers, that get involved in the education policy arena on strictly volunteer basis. And one of the reasons why is that a lot of people have gotten into trouble when they're young, and this sort of thing holds people back," Cotton told GoLocal.

Alternatives?

I'm sorry Mr. Cotton, but I refuse to believe the reason more fathers aren't involved in education policy is because they got into trouble as youngsters. There are probably a plethora of reasons as to why more people aren't involved, but to imply that most men take a back seat to education policy because they have skeletons in their closets is one heck of a straw man argument. 

There are scores of men across the state who would be thrilled to serve on an education policy advisory board, but don't know that the opportunity exists. That's because Rhode Island's government still runs as a good ole boy's and girl's club where you need to be a part of the "in" crowd to even know about these opportunities. In the same respect, there are plenty of small businessmen and women who are more than qualified to serve on the state's Commerce Corporation (who don't own seedy businesses), but aren't offered the opportunity because they don't know the right people, despite their talents..

The time is long past due for Governor Raimondo to make sure her team properly vets the potential appointments to the state boards and commissions to make sure they're qualified, the best person to serve, and don't have questionable pasts or controversial business ventures. Doing so will project the competence that we all expect from the Raimondo administration.

Russell J. Moore has worked on both sides of the desk in Rhode Island media, both for newspapers and on political campaigns Send him email at [email protected]. Follow him on twitter @russmoore713.

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